Principles of cancer systemic therapy chemotherapy hormonal therapy Therapy of cancer (and not only...) local surgery radiotherapy other kriotherapy hyperthermia ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation
cells that cease division S (DNA synthesis) 14 Chemotherapy mechanism of action
cycle/phase non-specific
alkylating agents
phase specific
G1 phase
L-asparaginase
steroids
S phase
antimetabolites
anthracyclins
G2 phase
bleomycin
topo I inhibitors
M phase
Vinca alkaloids
taxanes
topo II inhibitors
15 Chemosensitivity of tumors
high
ALL
Hodgkinsdisease
NHL
testicular cancer
SCLC
Wilms tumor
medium
ovarian cancer
breast cancer
osteosarcoma
head neck cancer
multiple myeloma
bladder cancer
colorectal cancer
low
NSCLC
cervical cancer
endometrial cancer
adult soft tissue sarcoma
malignant melanoma
liver cancer
pancreatic cancer
16 Chemotherapy - indications Neoplasms in Which Chemotherapy is the Primary Therapeutic Modality for Localized Tumors Large cell lymphomas Burkitt's lymphoma Childhood and some adult stages of Hodgkin's disease Wilms' tumor Embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma Small cell lung cancer Central nervous system lymphomas 17 Chemotherapy - indications Neoplasms in Which Primary Chemotherapy Can Allow for Less Mutilating Surgery Anal carcinoma Bladder carcinoma Breast cancer Laryngeal cancer Osteogenic sarcoma Soft tissue sarcomas 18 Chemotherapy - indications Neoplasms in Which Clinical Trials Indicate an Expanding Role for Primary Chemotherapy in the Future Nonsmall cell lung cancer Breast cancer Esophageal cancer Nasopharyngeal cancer Other cancers of the head and neck region Pancreatic cancer Gastric cancer Prostate cancer (hormones) Cervical carcinoma 19 Chemotherapy - indications Neoplasms in Which Chemotherapy May Be Used for Metastases and/or Widespread Disease Embryonal carcinoma Choriocarcinoma Non-Hodgkin's lymphoma Leukemias (acute lymphoblastic leukemia, acute myeloid leukemia) 20 Mechanisms of treatment failure
inadequacy of tumor vasculature, leading to poor exposure to chemotherapeutic agents
selection of chemoresistant cells by selective killing of chemosensitive subpopulation
21 Chemotherapy - mechanisms of drug resistance
Cellular
decreased drug accumulation
? influx
? efflux
altered intracellular trafficking of drug
decreased drug activation
increased inactivation of drug or toxic metabolite
increased repair of drug-induced damage to DNA, proteins or membranes
increase in an alternative metabolic pathway bypassing the target mechanism
altered drug targets
altered co-factor or metabolite level
altered gene expression
DNA mutation, amplification or deletion
altered transcription, post- transcription processing or translation
altered stability of macromolecules
22 Chemotherapy - mechanisms of drug resistance (2)
Host-related
pharmacologic and anatomic drug barriers
host-drug interactions
? or ? drug inactivation by normal tissues
relative increase in drug sensitivity of normal tissues
host-tumor interactions
Functional
kinetic resistance of cells in G0
pharmacologic resistance inability to achieve sufficient drug concentrations
23 Methods to increase the efficacy of chemotherapy
standard dosing
high dose
dose-dense
24 Chemotherapy toxicity
myelosuppression
immunosuppression
nausea/vomiting
alopecia
mucositis
diarrhea
flu-like symptoms
25 Chemotherapy toxicity (2)
gonadal damage
sterility
hormonal changes
organ damage
cardiotoxicity
pulmonary damage
hepatotoxicity
nephrotoxicity
neuroxicity
local complications (extravasation)
second malignancies
26 Chemotherapy routes of administration
oral
intravenous
intramuscular
intrathecal
intraperitoneal
intrapleural
intrapericardial
intraarterial
isolated organ perfusion
portal vein
limb
27 Chemotherapy - strategy
single drug used rarely
combination
provides maximal cell kill within tolerable toxicity
provides broader range of coverage of resistant cells in a heterogeneous tumor
prevents/slows the development of resistant cells
28 Development of combination chemotherapy
drugs effective in particular tumor
different mechanisms of action
non-overlapping toxicity
different patterns of resistance
drugs used in their optimal dose and schedule
drugs given at consistent (as short as possible) intervals
29 Setting of use of systemic therapy
as a single modality
radical/definitive
palliative
in combined (multimodality) therapy
before local treatment (induction, neoadjuvant)
during local treatment (concomitant)
alternating with local treatment
after local treatment (adjuvant)
30 Multimodality therapy
induction
possibility to assess effect of treatment in vivo
early introduction of systemic therapy (prevention of development of chemoresistance)
undisturbed blood supply
prevention of tumor seeding during surgery
enabling of decreasing the extent of surgery
lack of interfering toxicities form other treatments
delay in local treatment (risk of progression)
increased risk of local treatment complications
31 Multimodality therapy
concomitant
no delay of any treatment modality
synergistic effect of various modalities
increased toxicity
need to modify doses of individual treatment modalities
32 Multimodality therapy
adjuvant
no delay in local treatment
higher sensitivity of microscopic tumor foci
lack of possibility to assess efficacy of treatment
delayed start of systemic treatment (possibility of develppment of resistance)
impaired blood supply (and drug penetration)
33 Hormonal therapy 34 Hormonotherapy mechanism of action
hormone deprivation
removal of hormone producing tissue (ablation)
inhibition of hormone production
blocking of hormone receptors
exogenous hormone treatment (additive therapy)
35 Hormonotherapy indications
breast cancer
prostate cancer
endometrial cancer
renal cancer
ovarin cancer
cancer cachexia
36 Hormones Affecting the Breast 37 Effects of oestrogen on transcription ofoestrogen responsive genes 38 Hormonotherapy of breast cancer estrogen depletion
estrogen source ablation
castration (surgery or RT)
adrenalectomy
removal or inhibition of gonadotropin action
hypophysectomy
LHRH agonists
danazol
progestagens
estrogen receptor blocking
tamoxifen and other SERM
fulvestrant
inhibition of peripheral estrogen synthesis
aromatase inhibitors
39 Premenopausal estrogen production 40 Methods of achieving ovarian ablation 41 Effects of tamoxifen on transcriptionof oestrogen responsive genes 42 Response to hormonal therapy in relation to estrogen and progesterone receptor expression 43 (No Transcript) 44 Hormonotherapy past and present
1896 Beatson oophorectomy causes remission of breast cancer in young women
ER/PgR first predictive factors in oncology
low toxicity long term use
advanced disease
adjuvant treatment of early disease
chemoprevention
45 Prostate cancer hormonal dependence 46 Prostate cancer hormonal therapy
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